But experts and enthusiasts can and will debate the EmDrive all day. Now, someone has finally decided to just launch it into space and see if it will actually fly.

Cannae, the company that built an early version of the EmDrive, plans to put one on a tiny satellite called a cubesat and use it to stay in orbit for at least six months. This is longer than satellites of this size tend to last — especially those without propellant.

If the satellite can stay in orbit, it means the engine is producing thrust. If it doesn't work, nobody will be surprised. Physics, remember.

Cannae doesn't have a launch date yet, so in the meantime, careful investigations will continue here on Earth. There are rumors more NASA EmDrive research will pass the peer review process, which would be a big step toward scientific credibility.